Yoga 3 Times a Week Pays Big Dividends

Taiwanese perform yoga poses at the start of International Yoga Day in Taipei, Taiwan, June 21, 2015. (AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying)

(Newser)
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"There's kind of a myth that says if you have arthritis, the good thing to do is to rest your joints," says a John Hopkins professor who co-authored a study that might bust the myth wide open. In the study of 75 sedentary adults with rheumatoid arthritis or knee osteoarthritis published in the Journal of Rheumatology, researchers found that subjects who practiced an hour of yoga three times a week for eight weeks enjoyed higher energy, less depression, reduced pain, and improved flexibility and walking ability, reports Time. Researchers pegged the improvement at 20% over those in the non-yoga control group and say the benefits were still evident nine months later.

Lead author Susan Bartlett tells Medical Daily that one subject even went on to become a marathon runner. More than 95% of the study's subjects were female, but Bartlett tells the website that for the purposes of this study, it made sense: 70% of rheumatoid arthritis sufferers are women. One caveat, one of the researchers tells Time: Not all yoga classes are equal and could even harm arthritis patients, so he advises checking with one's doctor and seeking out the gentler regimens found in classes for older, disabled, or pregnant students before heading straight into Downward-Facing Dog. (Read more discoveries stories.)

"the good thing to do is to rest your joints" I don't think being sedentary improves much of anything. I have found a nearly direct correlation between exercise and feeling good and having everything working. There are two keys. 1) Start any new exercise very slowly and build over time. Want to start doing pushups? Literally start with one or two and keep adding maybe every other day. That way, you don't get stiff and sore and give up. 2) Don't be off and on with any exercise. Never have a gap of longer than three days in any exercise you do. Muscles forget awfully fast.

andthatsthetruth

Sep 19, 2015 6:38 AM CDT

Watching women do yoga pays big dividends.

Naked_Emperor

Sep 18, 2015 9:45 PM CDT

I know someone that came back from being totally disabled. He could barely walk with crutches. A year of yoga later, and he is running.